24/7 Wall St.: Highest-Paid Players of All Time

7. Wayne Gretzky

Wayne Gretzky, also known as "The Great One," is widely regarded as the best player ever to put on skates. In his 22 professional seasons with four teams he set records in nearly every single major scoring scoring category, many of which appear completely unreachable. Gretzky scored 1,016 goals (including the postseason) over his career. He tallied 2,222 assists (including the postseason), nearly 1,000 more than the next-best record, held by Paul Coffey. Gretzky also holds single-season records for assists (163), points (215), and Goals (92). Gretzky was the only player to score 200 points or more in a season, a feat he accomplished four times. He was league MVP nine separate times, and won the Stanley Cup four times with the Edmonton Oilers. In 1991, a few seasons after he was traded to the L.A. Kings, Gretzky earned $3 million, more than 11 times the average player's salary in that year.

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On March 8th, Peyton Manning is set to make $28 million from the Indianapolis Colts, the highest amount ever paid to an NFL athlete, despite missing all of last year due to injury. It will also put him in the rarefied group of star athletes who make more than ten times the average salary in their sport, according to 24/7 Wall St's independent analysis.

Top athletes are now paid more than ever before. In fact, even when adjusting for inflation, older salaries fail to compare to current ones. As a result, nearly all of of the highest-paid athletes in current dollars are playing or have retired in the last decade.

Still, even in earlier times — when sports teams made far less money — they paid the best players much more than others. A better way to look at athletes' pay requires examination of all salaries since modern professional sports began. By comparing the salaries of the top-paid athletes from each era with the average salary of the sport at that time, the highest-paid players of all time can be counted. Based on an analysis of the highest salaries in the NBA, NHL, MLB and NFL in the last century, 24/7 Wall St. has identified the top-paid athletes that made at least ten times the average player's salary when they played.

In 2007, Alex Rodriguez negotiated a 10-year, $275 million contract with the New York Yankees that, by 2009, had him earning $33 million per year. Since he began playing baseball with the Mariners in 1994, A-Rod has hit more than 600 home runs, one of just eight to do so. He has been voted an All-Star 12 times, and was named American League MVP three times. Rodriguez also has fourteen separate 100+ RBI seasons, the most of any player in league history. In 2009, Rodriguez helped the Yankees win the World Series and won the Babe Ruth Award as the postseason MVP.

Arguably the most famous Baseball player of all time, George Herman "Babe" Ruth played 22 total seasons with three teams, most notably the New York Yankees. Ruth began his career as a pitcher for the Red Sox. However, it was not until he was sold to the Yankees in 1919 that the "Bambino" came into his own as one of the best hitters in the history of the game. During his fifteen-year career with New York, Ruth helped his team win four World Series titles, and personally set multiple hitting records that would stand for decades. He was the first player to hit 60 home runs in a single season. He also hit 714 home runs over the course of his career, a record that wasn't broken until 1974. Ruth was one of the first five players to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Bobby Hull spent 23 years in the NHL and the now-defunct WHA, playing for the Chicago Blackhawks, the Winnipeg Jets, and the Hartford Whalers. In 1973, the first year he played with WHA, Hull earned $270,000 — more than 10 times the average NHL player's salary at the time. Hull scored 913 goals over the course of his combined NHL and WHA careers. He won the Stanley Cup in 1961 with the Blackhawks. Hull scored 20 or more goals for 19 straight seasons, and had eight seasons of more than 50 goals. Hull is also notable as the father of Brett Hull, considered another one of hockey's greats.

Russian-born Sergei Fedorov played 18 separate seasons with four teams, but is best known for his thirteen seasons with the Detroit Red Wings between 1990 and 2003. While Fedorov was in Detroit, the Red Wings won three Stanley Cups, as well as winning a record 62 regular-season games in the 1995-96 season. During the 1998-99 season, Fedorov earned $14 million, nearly eleven times the average player salary in that year. Fedorov holds the record for the most goals scored by a Russian-born player in the NHL, at 483. He was also the first European-born player to be awarded the Hart Trophy as league MVP.

Wayne Gretzky, also known as "The Great One," is widely regarded as the best player ever to put on skates. In his 22 professional seasons with four teams he set records in nearly every single major scoring scoring category, many of which appear completely unreachable. Gretzky scored 1,016 goals (including the postseason) over his career. He tallied 2,222 assists (including the postseason), nearly 1,000 more than the next-best record, held by Paul Coffey. Gretzky also holds single-season records for assists (163), points (215), and Goals (92). Gretzky was the only player to score 200 points or more in a season, a feat he accomplished four times. He was league MVP nine separate times, and won the Stanley Cup four times with the Edmonton Oilers. In 1991, a few seasons after he was traded to the L.A. Kings, Gretzky earned $3 million, more than 11 times the average player's salary in that year.

In 1954, past the halfway point of his legendary career as a lifetime member of the Boston Red Sox, Ted Williams was in the middle of a contract paying him $100,000 a year. This was eleven times the average player's salary that year. Williams' career spanned 22 years from, 1939 to 1960, missing three seasons between 1942 and 1946 to serve in the Marines as an aviator. Williams was one of the greatest hitters in baseball, batting .344 over his long career; leading the American League in batting average six separate times; and being the last player to bat over .400 in a season. While he never won a World Series with the Red Sox, Williams won the American League MVP twice. He was inducted into the The Baseball Hall of Fame in 1966.

Joe Montana spent 16 years in the NFL between 1979 and 1994. He spent the last two years of his career with the Kansas City Chiefs, but he is known primarily as team leader and starting quarterback of the San Francisco 49ers, a position he held for more than a decade. In 1990, the last year he played a full season with San Francisco, Montana earned $4 million. The average NFL player salary at that point was just $356,000. Montana, nicknamed "Joe Cool," was famous for his ability to deal with postseason pressure. Over a seven-year period stretching from 1981 through 1990, Montana led the 49ers to four Super Bowl championships, and was himself voted MVP for three of them.

Mario Lemieux is considered by many to be the second-greatest hockey player of all time, trailing only Wayne Gretzky. Despite a career plagued by health problems–including a fight with cancer and chronic back injuries–and an early retirement, he finished #3 in goals/game, #7 in all time points, #9 in goals, and #10 in assists. He was the rookie of the year, won 5 MVP awards, skated in 10 All-Star games, and led the Pittsburgh Penguins to their first two Stanley Cups. Upon his first retirement after the 1996-97 season, he was immediately inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame, and became the 3rd player ever to play after being inducted when he returned to the ice in 2000. In 1992, having led the Penguins to back-to-back Stanley Cup championships, Lemieux signed a 7-year, $42 million contract, which would pay him over $11 million in the 1996-97 season.

Ty Cobb played 24 years of baseball between 1905 and 1928. The first 22 of those years were with the Detroit Tigers, with which he never won a World Series. However, over the course of his career, Cobb was outstanding, setting 90 separate records. To date, Cobb still holds the lead in several major categories, including the record for the highest lifetime batting average, at .366. Cobb also led the league in batting average a record 11 seasons, far more than any other player has done. In 1927, after leaving the Tigers, Cobb signed with the Philadelphia Athletics. That year, his second to last season, he earned $85,000, more than 12 times the average player's salary at the time. Cobb was voted in as one of the first five Baseball Hall of Fame inductees, with 98.2% voting in favor.

By all rights, Michael Jordan deserved to be the highest-paid basketball player of all time. During the 1997-1998 season, in the middle of leading the Bulls to three straight NBA Championships, Jordan was paid $33.14 million, more than 14 times the average NBA player's salary at the time, and the highest NBA salary ever. Jordan played 13 of his fifteen NBA seasons with the Bulls, winning 6 Championships while with in Chicago. Over his career, Jordan was playoff MVP six times, the NBA MVP five times, and was voted All-Star 14 times. "Air" Jordan holds numerous records, including the most points scored in a single playoff game (63), the most seasons to lead the league in scoring (10), and the most average points per game (30.1). Jordan was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2009.

It should probably come as a surprise that Joe Sakic is the highest-paid player in one of the four major sports. Sakic played his entire 20-year NHL career with the Quebec Nordiques franchise, which became the Colorado Avalanche in 1995. During his tenure, Sakic won two Stanley Cups with the Avalanche, was league MVP during the 2000-2001 season, and was voted to 13 All-Star games. Sakic currently holds the record for the most playoff overtime goals, at 8. In 1998, two years after the Avalanche won the Stanley cup in their first year as a team, the New York Rangers made a substantial offer that Colorado was forced to match. As a result, Sakic earned $17 million that season, more than 14 times the average NHL salary that year of $1.17 million. This deal, arguably more than any other in hockey, made NHL salaries higher than possibly sustainable for small-market teams. This drove the league down the path to its missed 2004-5 season and the subsequent salary cap system that it now has in place.